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ill in the old days. Master Luke's pistol was found just as he'd thrown it down, and his name on it. He must have thought he'd killed Sir Jasper. Small wrong, some people say, if he had, for Sir Jasper was bad as many a poor girl knew to her cost." "Uncle Luke should not have gone away," I said. "Well, you see, dearie, he thought it the kindest thing to do. And then--there were stories. I never believed them myself. People asked how it was that Master Luke came to be armed. There was reason enough, for the country was disturbed at the time." "Stories," I repeated after her--"what stories?" "Why, there were some bad enough to say that it was Master Luke was tryin' to abduct the lady, and that it was Sir Jasper was hinderin' him. I couldn't believe it myself. He cared for none but Miss Mary, although she'd been hard to him. And Miss Irene Cardew would have gone with Master Luke willin' enough. A pretty delicate little lady she was, and 'ud jump if she caught sight of her own shadow. Sure, Master Luke could have nothing but pity for her." "There seem to have been a great many stories," I said. "Aye, indeed, so there were, my jewel. There isn't two you'd meet in the county this minute 'ud hold the same opinion about it. Not but that any way the country people are on the side of Master Luke." I was silent for a few minutes, stroking Dido's silky head, letting her rippled ears fall through my fingers. Her dim eyes were fixed on me with a terrible wistfulness, as though she longed to speak and could not. I felt a great pity for the old dog. What a sad lot is theirs, depending on our presence as they do for the light in their sky, to whom our slightest absence is the absence of death. "Was nothing ever heard of him?" I asked after that silence. "Nothing. Some said that he got on board a hooker and was carried to Liverpool and got off to America. Others said the same hooker--she was a stranger in these parts--was swept out to sea and, in the big storm that broke that very week, foundered." "It is most likely," said I, "for if he were living he would never have left them in suspense all these years." "There, you're wrong, Miss Bawn. Master Luke is not dead." Dido stirred uneasily and whimpered. "He's not dead, Miss Bawn, for if he was dead the banshee would have cried. And the dead coach would have driven up with a rattle and stopped at our door. It never has, Miss Bawn. What you've heard has never sto
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